Improving atmospheric path attenuation estimates for radio propagation applications by microwave radiometric profiling
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Published:2021-04-08
Issue:4
Volume:14
Page:2737-2748
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Alyosef Ayham, Cimini DomenicoORCID, Luini Lorenzo, Riva Carlo, Marzano Frank S.ORCID, Biscarini MariannaORCID, Milani LucaORCID, Martellucci Antonio, Gentile SabrinaORCID, Nilo Saverio T.ORCID, Di Paola Francesco, Alkhateeb Ayman, Romano FilomenaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Ground-based microwave radiometer (MWR) observations of downwelling brightness temperature
(TB) are commonly used to estimate atmospheric attenuation at relative
transparent channels for radio propagation and telecommunication purposes. The atmospheric
attenuation is derived from TB by inverting the radiative transfer equation with a
priori knowledge of the mean radiating temperature (TMR). TMR is usually
estimated by either time-variant site climatology (e.g., monthly average computed from atmospheric
thermodynamical profiles) or condition-variant estimation from surface meteorological
sensors. However, information on TMR may also be extracted directly from MWR
measurements at channels other than those used to estimate atmospheric attenuation. This paper
proposes a novel approach to estimate TMR in clear and cloudy sky from independent MWR
profiler measurements. A linear regression algorithm is trained with a simulated dataset obtained
by processing 1 year of radiosonde observations of atmospheric thermodynamic profiles. The
algorithm is trained to estimate TMR at K- and V–W-band frequencies (22–31 and
72–82 GHz, respectively) from independent MWR observations at the V band
(54–58 GHz). The retrieval coefficients are then applied to a 1-year dataset of real
V-band observations, and the estimated TMR at the K and V–W band is compared with
estimates from nearly colocated and simultaneous radiosondes. The proposed method provides
TMR estimates in better agreement with radiosondes than a traditional method, with
32 %–38 % improvement depending on frequency. This maps into an expected improvement in
atmospheric attenuation of 10 %–20 % for K-band channels and ∼30 % for V–W-band
channels.
Funder
European Space Agency European Cooperation in Science and Technology
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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